72 """':-.....--. ..., '::::::::":':':" 'í -:.'SI}Sf" ..1 GET SET TO SAIL , . . or just to loaf in our pì neapple cloth " . .cot oa nts from H'" WIt zipper :'Goral ,,' royal or moss. 'Sizes 8 16 12.00 " White cotton piQué \ . ,::\overblouse + . 8..16 11.00 'i 'j: . " IPL:EASt!' AO.O 50t FOF SHIÞPIN.G}< < ' :i:=:: .f i :"> "<':? .' :::::;0. '.:<:: m , t .:;:::": ":<",; ':,\" .:..::: . ;:" ::::::: , -t "'" ,x ..Z" '. ;-i;: / 4'" .. " ' s'; ',' ".f .-> . ' ;0 , 1 'ill ' .;: .æ i':=> ,;; w- ú: ;j. y ] h f1 '<<- j., '::':::f, " .'\1 . '>., :: i:: >, .. :", ,.:.'<;Ý, Ù-,' : 'çl ::: :::::":">:: <:::,. :'::':' .:.., :-t:: } t , t . ."< " f F .:: I ... . '.' "I.. " , ,ø{: .{ " . ;.. ( :.:. :. .: . 545 MADISON AVE.. . ATSSTHST.. NEW YORK 22 .:-..' ..". ''; .. "" "" ..... , ,,:> 'd i , ..'Î .. %. () P IJl'D. 'H-E ;E ':H:'1 "1 ' Fate is Fickle. Conditions may arise that change your financial circum- stances This is why Mutual Benefit Life policies offer a contract right to change to a Ingher or lower premium policy, under a most liberal provision. This is a distinct advantage for anyone whose responsibilities have increased or decreased, or whose earnings start later and may decrease earlier And it's just one of "Seven Significant Benefits" in every MBL policy. MUTUAL BENEFIT LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY · NEWARK, NEW JERSEY · SINCE 1845 some years ago. "Legislation is literally made outsIde the halls of Congress by groups of persons interested in legisla- tion, mainl} with economic motives, and the deliberatIve process within Congress constItutes a sort of formal ratifica- tIon." ) As soon as Sonosky glanced over the amendments this group proposed, he knew he was in for a bad day. "During the Kefauver hearings, the industry kept agreeing that some correctIve measures were needed," he remarked afterward, "but when I saw their amendments, I realized just how far they meant to go toward remedying the abuses-not an inch!" HIs duty, as he saw It, was to bring the P .M.A. provisIons into line with the President's Consumer Mes- sage-no small matter "We battled back and forth and yelled and swore at each other, but still there was a good deal of gIve and take," he said. "By the tÏtne we finished, I had managed to get some good things added to the bill. At least, there were no steps backward." About the best that could be said for the new bill, Kefauver remarked later, was that it didn't repeal the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of 1938. In place of S. 1552's registration provision was one stating merely that all drug manufac- turers were required to file their names and addresses with the F.D .A., and though another provision called for drug companies to be inspected at least once every two years, it set no inspec- tIon standards beyond stipulating that qualIty-control measures meet "current good manufacturIng practice"-a phrase so vague as to cloud any attempt at juridical interpretation. The F .D.A. was not requIred to extend its certifica- tion of antibiotics to the newer antI- bIotics. There was an efficacy provision, but, unlike Kefauver's, it would not pre- vent a product that had been approved as effectIve for one purpose from being sold for any number of other purposes, with no need to furnish proof of its ef- ficacy in the new fields The problem of generic names was left entirely up to the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare, putting him in an awkward position, for with nothing set down in the bill to guide hIm, he would be sub- ject to endless pressure from the indus- try. Finally, there was nothing at all on drug advertising. A MEETING of the Judiciary CommIttee was scheduled for the mornIng of Monday, June 11 th, and as Kefauver, knowing nothing about the secret meeting and the secret bill, head- ed for the conference room, he felt quite confident about his chances of gettIng